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Research explores link between hair colour and wound recovery

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A new study suggests that a common pigment gene may subtly influence how quickly the skin repairs itself.

You’ve probably never thought twice about the colour of your hair beyond how it looks in photos or whether the sun makes it fade in summer.

But the shade growing from your scalp may reveal more about your body than you expect.

Many of us recognise hair as a marker of identity, family traits or personality — yet scientists say it might also be tied to how effectively your skin recovers from small injuries.

The gene behind the colour

Researchers at the University of Edinburgh recently explored a genetic variant called MC1R, well known for producing red hair.

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Their work, published in PNAS, focused on how this gene influences processes far deeper than pigmentation.

In controlled tests on mice, animals carrying the same MC1R variant commonly found in red-haired people recovered more slowly from minor skin damage than darker-haired mice.

A slower repair process

The team observed that the MC1R variant reshaped the way the immune system responded after injury.

Instead of resolving inflammation quickly, the process lingered. That delay seemed to restrict how fast the skin could rebuild itself.

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Although mouse and human skin differ in some ways, the underlying repair mechanisms are similar enough that the scientists believe the findings may translate to people as well.

What happens next

With early animal results pointing toward a potential biological disadvantage linked to hair colour, the next phase will involve carefully controlled tests on human volunteers.

If the same pattern appears, the findings could change how clinicians understand wound recovery in certain individuals.

The researchers note that red hair is rare globally — under two percent of the population — making the genetic insight both distinctive and scientifically valuable.

Also read: Three everyday ingredients may help ease inflammation

The article is based on information from Illustreret Videnskab og PNAS

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